The winter of 2013-2014 will not be easy to forget, especially with the bitter temperatures and several inches of snow that buried Kentuckiana.

But so far this season the snow has stayed away. The last time it piled up was November 27th.

"That puts us on a 54-day streak without any measurable snow in the city," said WDRB Chief Meteorologist Marc Weinberg.

"We have seen no measurable snow in the month of December or January yet,” he said. “Now if we finish out the month of January with no snow, this will be the first time since 1931 to 1932 that we've gone without any measurable snow in the month of January and December."

Last season Clark County, Indiana almost ran out of salt. It spent $175,000 on 2,200 tons and used nearly all of it. This year it spent more money but has only used 250 tons.

"It just keeps us from overtime and maintenance on trucks and fuel using it and plus it saves on the salt," said Clark County Highway Department Superintendent Jim Ross.

It's the same story in Kentucky. If any of the salt is left over, that means the state won't have to purchase as much next year meaning more money for road maintenance. Things like fixing potholes, trimming trees and cleaning out ditches.